While looking through a telescope, young Pioneer Adam Ledermann hears a voice from the moon, which asks him to cultivate flowers that could grow there. He begins a series of experiments, but growing a moon flower proves to be more difficult than he thought.
On the run, a young girl Olli, her loyal dog, Pinkus, and their new friend, Alexander the Horse, seek refuge from a storm in an old mill, which also happens to be the lab of a science professor and his crocodile, Susi, who looks after him.
The process of women's liberation goes hand in hand with the building of the socialist state in the GDR. Wool spinners and collective farmers, city planners and architects, graphic artists and congressional delegates all discuss their lives as women in contemporary socialist society and comment o
This documentary introduces international viewers to the GDR and demonstrates why it is preferable to live in a socialist state where everyone enjoys human rights, shared ownership of wealth and property, the right to work and education, and positive social relationships.
"Neglecting to pay a free visit to the Hanoi museums cost the American people 56,369 lives and 146 billion dollars.”
Two thousand researchers from 45 countries took part in the 5th International Cereal and Bread Congress in Dresden. Through local excursions, delegate were also introduced to the GDR's grain-growing industry and its modern technology and methods.
Three documentary segments illustrate the GDR's international partnerships in the fields of politics, art, and commerce.
Three brief documentary segments report on both positive and strained political relationships between the GDR and several Western countries.
1. A committee on the political recognition of the GDR meets in Denmark.
This documentary contrasts East German efforts to achieve international peace and solidarity with oppressed peoples with Western imperialism and racism, in particular the the struggle for Civil Rights in the USA and apartheid in South Africa.